Infidelity and Incriminating E-mails

First, let me say that I think the job of a psychiatrist is to be helpful. I want my patients to do well, in a way not dissimilar, I think, from the way someone might feel towards a brother. I am anxious that my patients not get into trouble. I will not, of course, facilitate behavior that I think is frankly illegal or plainly likely to hurt other people; but I try not to sit in judgment. Sometimes, I find myself trying to rescue my patients from the consequences of behavior that I do not necessarily condone. Infidelity falls into this category.

Infidelity causes pain and trouble in a marriage, but to a varying degree. There is an effect, for example, on the unfaithful person, himself/herself, who is thrust into a pattern of lying and deceit which undermines self-respect. There are numerous other effects on other members of the family and, for that matter, on the “other” woman or man. Still, plainly the principal injurious effect is on the deceived spouse. I have seen women who have expressed to me indifference about what their husband does outside of the marriage, usually because the marriage has soured already; but even these women, discovering a husband’s infidelity, are disgusted and embarrassed. Much more commonly, a deceived spouse feels hurt—sometimes, betrayed. Suppose a woman’s husband cheated on her and she did not find out—would she still be injured?

Most people would say, I think, that the act of betrayal itself is the cause of the injury, and the deceived spouse would be damaged in some ways even if she never discovered her husband’s deceit. Still, I think most people recognize, also, that making that person aware of a spouse’s infidelity is likely to worsen that injury and do damage that might be irrevocable. For that reason, friends or neighbors, even a family member, will hesitate to tell a woman that they saw her husband out the previous night with another woman. For that reason, also, I strongly discourage unfaithful husbands, or wives, from confessing an infidelity to a spouse, just to alleviate their feelings of guilt. They are not entitled to make someone else feel worse so they can feel better.

I have seen a number of women— I can think of two off-hand—who expressed to me bitterly the wish that they never learned about these infidelities. One reported sexual encounter had occurred a number of years before on a business trip to Europe. The other was a very brief liaison that took place sometime previously in a hotel room. Neither was described by the respective husband as having any significance. Neither confession would have happened, except that both husbands became depressed for other reasons and then sought to alleviate their depression and guilt by admitting to these acts. The confessions, themselves, were injurious.

It is with this sort of concern that I find myself often warning patients who are involved in an illicit affair (usually men, but not always) against engaging in certain actions that are likely to prove damaging to them later on. These include recklessly risking that the affair will become public.

Certain affairs are by their very nature dangerous—involvement with a neighbor’s wife or a boss, for instance. Other times the circumstances virtually guarantee there will be trouble, such as having an affair with the wife of a Mafioso. When I point out these dangers, usually my patient readily agrees, but shrugs. He is not deterred. Obvious dangers ore overshadowed by the appeal—whatever that appeal may be—of that illicit relationship. To be in such a relationship is to be caught up in it. But often, for obscure reasons, even someone determined to continue that relationship will not take obvious, simple-to-take precautions to prevent being discovered.

Incriminating e-mails. Everyone knows—one would think—that no one should put in writing any thoughts, or record any behaviors, that would be embarrassing if they came to light. For that reason, teen-agers are told to be careful about what they put up on their Facebook page. Even if something is deleted, it is still present somewhere in cyber-space and can be revived at any time. Angry letters should not be dispatched until time has passed to allow second thoughts. And, certainly, e-mails that document an illicit affair should never be sent.

A conversation with a patient: “Right now, you’re having an affair at work with somebody who you know has had affairs with two other office workers. There is a good chance that other people will find out about your relationship, as you learned about these other men. But, if you’re determined to see her, obviously you should not be communicating with her by e-mail. First of all, you don’t know what this woman is likely to feel down the road. Sometimes, ex-lovers are blackmailed. Besides, e-mails are never secret. Often—very often-- I hear about a divorce that was provoked by a spouse reading her husband’s e-mail.”

The patient nodded thoughtfully. A few minutes later he got up to leave. “You’re right,” he said, his hand on the door, “but, you know, I’m going to do it anyway.”

What in the world is going on here? Usually, men and women in this situation seem not to appreciate the risk of such communications. They seem to be foolish, even reckless; but they do not seem perversely and purposely indifferent to their best interests. It looks at first glance as if they just do not understand that they are doing something dangerous—but this patient came out explicitly and said he was knowingly willing to endanger himself. Why?

Why does the head of the C.I.A . set up a special “secret” e-mail account to communicate to his lover, when he, more than anyone else, must know that there are no secret e-mail accounts?

I think it is sort-of easy to understand why someone impetuously engages in a reckless sexual act. I can sort-of understand why someone allows himself to be caught having sexual relations with his secretary on top of his desk. He gets carried away. We have evolved to have sex first and think later on about whether or not it was a good idea. But, surely, writing an e-mail does not have that satisfaction. Why does someone choose to ignore such an obvious danger?

Some clinicians think it is the danger, itself, that is appealing. I do not believe this to be true. I understand that some people engage in sexual acts which have to have an element of danger to make sex interesting, but that is a different matter. I remember a couple who could not have sexual relations successfully unless the act took place in their driveway. Even then, I thought it was mostly the fantasy of being watched that made this situation exciting, rather than the possibility of getting caught. (I report a number of other lurid examples of this sexual impairment in “Come One, Come All.”) But having spoken to many people who have revealed their indiscretions in writing, I do not have the impression that the prospect of being caught was especially titillating. In fact, it usually seems that these individuals, unlike the patient I quote above, were dismissive, or even oblivious, ahead of time to the possibility of being exposed, and are regretful afterwards.

Having seen a great many of these e-mails, written under such circumstances, I have noted some common elements:

Some of these e-mails are frankly erotic. They have the appeal, more or less, of phone sex, that is, they stimulate sexual arousal. They are a distinct part of the sexual affair. Some of the seemingly absurd, sexually explicit, e-mails that are reported in the popular press, usually from a political figure, are of that character. It is particularly striking that the writer does not seem to understand the potential damage of such communications coming to light and ruining a career. The other striking fact about them is that the exhibitionistic aspects of them do not seem to ordinary people to be especially exciting in the first place (Pictures of bare chests or genitals.)

Many of the e-mails seem to reflect romantic feelings that are often not consistent with the surreptitious aspect of the relationship. These people rarely entertain the idea of leaving their spouses to maintain this new relationship; and, yet, they engage in the sort of frequent, romantic communication other couples who are just falling in love might enter into. It is as if they entertain a fantasy—knowing it is a fantasy—of falling in love. They want to communicate with each other all the time, even if they are far apart.

After a while, these e-mails take on the prosaic character of messages couples of long-standing might send to each other. “I miss seeing you,” or “It was really nice being together that weekend.” These are explicit enough to inform a deceived spouse of what is going on, yet they are not particularly erotic. I think people send such memoranda because previous communications have not been intercepted. If someone engages in risky behavior which has not previously come to light, it becomes easier to believe it will not come to light the next time. More specifically, I think the people who continue to write these incriminating letters no longer imagine that they will be caught.

Why then, did my patient—and others—write incriminating e-mails despite the risk of having them read by the wrong people? Writing these e-mails is an integral part of the affair. They are not just a way of arranging a time and place for the next meeting; they are important and satisfying in their own right. When I speak as forcibly as I can against writing them, patients usually ignore me. It is as if I asked someone who overeats to count calories, or if I asked a smoker to keep track of the circumstances in which he/she lights up a cigarette. Standing back from their accustomed behavior tends to make it less satisfying; and people resist. They do not want to think about the implications of what they do. Thinking objectively about what they do interferes with their ability to continue their behavior—and they do not wish to stop for the same reasons they entered into the dangerous, or otherwise undesirable, behavior in the first place. (c) Fredric Neuman 2012. Follow Dr. Neuman's blog at fredricneumanmd.com/blog

Sometimes I wonder if it isn't a combination of:
Arrogance
Entitlement
Sociopathy
Selfishness (always includes selfishness)

That brings someone to this behavior. The offender seems to "challenge" getting caught. Getting closer and closer with the emails, texts, sexts, even phone calls. I just don't get why, but they do this...

If one is having an affair, enjoying the illicit company of another person, being vulnerable to a secret partner, what evidence is left that the relationship exists?

Affairs occur in hotel rooms, in cars, and maybe a storage closet at work. Once the discussions stop and everyone pulls up their pants there is nothing left, nothing to prove that somebody cares about somebody else in a dirty dirty way. Email can be the prize. Email can be read over and over again, studied, memorized and fantasized. Yes, it happened, somebody is out there, it is real.

These little written gems are the prize, and also the undoing of many careers and marriages. But nobody thinks that far ahead.

The affair relationship is much like any other relationship that produces these sorts of communications. The new relationship energy pervades everything the people do, manifesting as sexual excitement alternating with erotic messaging (whichever comes first). The people having the affair glow. Life is sweeter. Boredom is a thing of the past. The sex is fantastic. The sense of relief and elation is, to me, unmistakable proof that many people are living in a general state of sexual/relationship deprivation and the affair produces delight by alleviating these shortfalls. The state of delight is what affairs are all about, whether a one-night stand or a years-long dalliance.

So, author misunderstands that affairs are about attaining pleasure, not about avoiding negative outcomes. In this way, they are PERFECTLY rational. It's a cost-benefit analysis, only the costs are considered low-probability when considered incident-to-incident, and the benefits are WONDERFUL! In fairness and depending on the duration of the affair, the overall chance of being discovered is pretty high, but precautionary measures have little place in this calculus for all but the most highly organized of cheaters. Victims of cheaters are simply being painfully acquainted with the multi-partner preference that human primates share with other primates. That's why human male testicles are so proportionately large when compared to many other animals, because human male sperm is designed to compete with another male's sperm in the vagina--now how do you figure all that sperm got in there at the same time??? I'm looking at you, Ladies!

I don't like author's "Oh my, I simply cannot understand" nonsense. It's all pretty obvious to me. The problem that should be discussed is: why do we have a social mechanism like monogamy/marriage that leaves so many unfulfilled people? And then, we add insult to injury by suggesting that people who have the nerve to notice the shortfall should somehow be ashamed to remedy the scarcity! Get real! Notice that this analysis would explain why cheating has been around as long as monogamy has--monogamy is unnatural, don't do it unless you HONESTLY only want to have sex with one person until the day that you die. Is that really your dream? I doubt it! Let's stop kidding ourselves because that's the real source of the problem, not emails that occur far down the causal chain.

Reading this viewpoint is great and I don't doubt there are plenty of people that would have rather broken up then been told they have been cheated on or the person they love is sleeping with someone else. So to all of those out there that are having affairs do your spouse a favor and end it silently without adding the extra hurt.

It is difficult, even for myself, to think that I could have had an affair that lasted this long. It has taken place during all this time, on 4 continents. It is complicated. He and I were living together, were to get married, when, one night, I could not attend this dinner, he went alone, and a very rich and famous woman visiting the country we were living in at that time, met him .. and the rest is history. He broke up with me, and she married him. In all this time, she has known nothing of me. She has been busy with Galas, Charity work etc.. He and I continued seeing each other frequently over 31 years. We both have lived separately in several different countries during this time.
I really loved this man. And it did hurt and humiliate me when he dumped me because a rich and famous woman fell in love with him. And married him. But, our affair is now finished.
Now, about the above article. I have never understood why he trusted me so much, and risked so much, to have such a long term affair with me.

There is so much evidence of this long term affair. There is no problem there. He can be crucified in a heartbeat.

During this affair I have never ever entertained any idea of us being married. I realized he would always be a cheater.
But, as our affair ended, he did something which has made me very angry, and I long to get back at him. But I agonize over what it could do to him and the people close to him. Especially his wife.
( I am single, and he has no children with her.)
I am torn, is it ever right to expose an affair like this one?
I realise I will also face a huge backlash, as all sympathy will for his wife. ( We live in different countries)
I know many will probably think this is my pain to bear. The thing is that I have always loved this man, and probably still do. Probably always will. How do you explain love.?
Part of me wants to expose him, The other part is terrified for him. I truly agonize over this.

I do not know what you should do. I think you should put off a decision for a number of months, at least; and see how you feel at the end of that time. There might be repercussions for you, along with the other people involved.